Just How Much Privacy Do We Have? 341
stuffman64 writes: "Popular Science is running an excellent article on just how private our daily lives are. The article chronicles a typical day of a make-believe Graphics Designer from Chicago. Throughout his day, he unwittingly supplies companies with information that can potentially be used against him. And with GPS-enabled cell phones just starting to hit the market, our privacy can only continue to deteriorate from here. A must read."
Where are our flying cars? (Score:3, Funny)
--Blair
Re:Where are our flying cars? (Score:2)
Re:Where are our flying cars? (Score:2)
It's embarassing that he hasn't produced a flyable prototype. It's quite possible to build such a thing; the Avrocar [si.edu] did it in the 1950s. The thing was aerodynamically unstable. This was expected, and an active stabilization system was provided, but 1950s control technology wasn't up to the job of making an unstable aircraft flyable. Today, that's far less of a problem.
Re:Where are our flying cars? (Score:2)
Half the magazine are ads, and another quarter of them are half baked product reviews (for example, comparing iMac with top of the line Sony desktop) with appropriate information on where to buy them.
In the past year, only a handful of articles were worth reading, and this one is definately the best I have seen thus far.
Maybe I should just use the money to subscribe to
Popular Science (Score:2)
Leem
Re:Popular Science (Score:2)
Privacy is a legitimate concern....but (Score:5, Funny)
9:14 am: Instant messaging
Mark IMs his girlfriend: "Don't worry about last night. I'll get tested. Love you."
I'd say privacy should be the least of his concerns.
Just How Much Privacy Do We Have? (Score:2)
You have no privacy, get over it. [wired.com]
GPS Phone Question (Score:2, Insightful)
Is there any reason that a phone could not simply fire up the GPS unit when 911 were called? Do any of these GPS-enabled units do this?
Somehow this feature seems like it would be a major selling point to me.
Re:GPS Phone Question (Score:3, Informative)
The GPS will have to be already running, it takes time to lock on the satellites and get enough data to compute a fix; once it has that info it can track very accurately. The real question is will the sending of that data be limited to just 911 calls. Every indication is that it will not. While it would be very handy to be able to send the data when you want to and let another party receive it (perhaps a person you are trying to meet with or a website you want location specific information from), it seems more likely that the phone company will capture this data against your will and sell it, it would be valuable to a lot of people. It's even been suggest you might start getting targeted instant messaging advertisements when you get close to a store targeting you.
Re:GPS Phone Question (Score:2)
Or for that matter, anywhere it doesn't have a clear view of the sky. Such as in your pocket.
Re:GPS Phone Question (Score:3, Informative)
RTFA (Score:3, Informative)
RTFA.
Re:GPS Phone Question (Score:2)
No there is not
Emergency button: in case of emergency, up to five SOS messages with your location is sent, and a voice connection is opened to a predefined number
GPS enabling, is, at the moment, a non-issue (Score:3, Insightful)
Personally, I wish the WOULD get the rest of the darn GPS thing working, so that next time I'm lost I can get directions!
Now when "they" decide that GPS will not be turn off-able, oh well, I guess I'll just turn the whole darn phone off. If I'm feeling *super paranoid* that day, I suppose I'll have to go to the trouble of removing the battery too. It's too d*mn intrusive anyway, even when it *doesn't* know where I am.
Re:GPS enabling, is, at the moment, a non-issue (Score:2)
Many of the pocket size Etrex units have this feature. I have the Magellan Map 330 and love it. It has paid for itself in gas saved several times. It has gotten me out of traffic tie ups. Road blocked by an accident? just cut into a neighborhood, check map for current location and locate alternate route on the spot. It saves time and gas. This alone made mine better than free. No need to re-fold and store the map when done.
Re:GPS enabling, is, at the moment, a non-issue (Score:2)
Sometimes spending money saves more money. Choose your toys wisely. I've saved aprox 5 hours of stuck in traffic time with mine in the last 6 months. What's that worth?
On dash nav is the only way to cut the plugged throughfares and make it through that housing complex to the next open street. Most housing complexes are lost traveler unfriendly. A map GPS fixes the gardem maze of unfamiliar winding residentual streets. It's as simple as You are Here X, the way out is up two streets to the left and around the bend. It beats being lost in the maze.
Re:GPS enabling, is, at the moment, a non-issue (Score:2)
Well, considering that GPS requires line-of-sight to work.. just don't use your phone outside. If you're inside, GPS won't work. Or you can wrap your phone in tin foil.. it'll block GPS, but act as a nice antenna for your cell phone.
Of course they can still triangulate your position without GPS.. so your best choice is to stay in your basement, with your shotguns.. listening for the FBI.
Re:GPS enabling, is, at the moment, a non-issue (Score:3, Informative)
Um, have you tried one of the map units? Are you thinking of the antiques that only gave a latatude and longitude? Check out the useful features they now have! Ever got lost in a suburban developement? A map unit will mark the maze with a "you are here going this direction" indication. It's a simple matter to locate a route to an exit to a main street.
I'm no longer afraid to jump off a plugged street and cut through a housing developement to the next unclogged street. It's saved me many hours sitting stuck in traffic. It's much easer (and safer) to navagate with a GPS map unit than try to read a street sign and find your location on a paper map while driving. Not all streets have the luxury of a place to pull off out of traffic to read a map. Preplaned routes in the GPS let you know your next turn is a quarter mile away, instead of trying to keep track of street signs and house numbers. Hmm, a quarter mile away, that is probably the second light ahead... It's that simple. They could take down all residentual street signs and take off all the house numbers, and I could still pull up in front of the right house on a service call. I pre-load my destination and route before leaving home.
I no longer have that "Dude, I got lost in Rhode Island yesterday" feeling.
Mmmm, cookies (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Mmmm, cookies (Score:2)
This keeps many sites from being broken. Your cookie history goes away when you log out of the current session. Keep some cookies, like your
Re:Mmmm, cookies (Score:2)
To bring this back on topic, let me ask you this: will there be a market in the future for consumer electronics devices (cell phones, PDAs, etc.) that give you the same level of control over how much information you're willing to share?
That Eye (Score:2, Funny)
Ya tell me about it (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Ya tell me about it (Score:2, Insightful)
We either end up in a situation analogous to that described by Bill Burroughs in which everyone is either a criminal or a prison guard or they are going to have to be much more discriminating in what kind of data they collect. The classical example is all the pointers that were collected concerning the loonies who attacked the World Trade Center. They never got around to putting the dots together because they had entirely too many unrelated and meaningless dots. This is not rocket science. But then these are not rocket scientists either.
These are people who are still functioning under the Burger King metaphor that "more is better." I am sorry: More is not better. 50 cameras are not better than 1 camera in the right place. Cameras are no substitute for intelligence, and intelligence (the intellectual kind) is one quality that is severely lacking in law enforcement circles. More could be done to improve crime statistics by testing and raising the intelligence of police cadets than by any fancy technological "fix." The really sad part of this all is the more time these characters spend sitting in front of a monitor, the less time they spend learning to actually detect anything.
Re:Ya tell me about it (Score:2)
-rp
Re:Ya tell me about it (Score:2)
jesus man, we've gotta triple the number of cops on the streets, this is an epidemic!
No need for GPS (Score:4, Informative)
Who needs to worry about GPS enabled phones?
A cell phone's signal is received by multiple antennas at distinct locations simultaneously, therefore, it's only a matter of using triangulation to determine a phone's location based upon signal strength.
Here's a sample of its applications, and if you do a quick search, you'll surely find more:
http://www.twincities.com/mld/twincities/3223847.Re:No need for GPS (Score:2, Informative)
your cellphone *already* lowjacks you (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:your cellphone *already* lowjacks you (Score:2)
Re:your cellphone *already* lowjacks you (Score:4, Interesting)
Cell phone location is possible without GPS by timing the signal arrival between different towers. This is not nearly effective as GPS, but this time they hit it right on the head. Unfortunately, this non-GPS solution is much more expensive and less accurate than the GPS route, but nonetheless effective in semi-rural areas such as where I was.
Read about this technology here [wirelessdevnet.com].
Re:your cellphone *already* lowjacks you (Score:2)
Re:your cellphone *already* lowjacks you (Score:2)
Umm... That's how GPS works. Your reciever times the arrival of signals from several sattelites and decides where it is. Cell tower positioning is the same thing with the work being done at the other end.
Keeping records and triangulating isn't "much more expensive and less accurate" than launching and maintaining a constellation of sattelites. It's just more expensive to reinvent the wheel. It is more accurate, however; a good GPS signal isn't always there, but if you're on the phone, you are hooked in to the towers.
Privacy Legislation (uhhh...yeah) (Score:3)
Obviously, opt-out should be the default, otherwise an undue burden of opting-out on tens of thousands of databases would be placed on the individual.
Unfortunately, with the current climate ushered in by the War on *.*, we're not likely to see anything remotely resembling protection of civil liberties for years to come.
Until we fight collection and access to this data, we're all going to be run against "terrorist" profiles. The feds might decide that your choice of cusine this weekend fits a "terrorist diet" profile - though to pick a point with the article I think a visit from the feds is much more likely to result from a /. post than a visit to the supermarket.
Another good PopSci Read (Score:4, Interesting)
Here [popsci.com] is another feature which links to a website that can map out a route in Manhattan to avoid its 2400 or so security cameras watching your every move. If you happened to read the article, a link to this also appears to the right.
By now you would think I work for Popular Science. I have no job. I employ my University with a $24,000 per year salary.
Re:Another good PopSci Read (Score:2)
Or rather, my parents would...
Or rather, I'd be going to a state school for free.
One thing about privacy... (Score:2, Troll)
Re:One thing about privacy... (Score:2)
When it comes to advertising and marketers, I fall back to the basics: Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Notably, that liberty part. Why should I have to waste my free time wading through ads I may not be interested in? If I'm paying all the costs to maintain my cell phone, why should anyone be freely allowed to send ads to it? What if I'm not interested in geophysically targeted marketing? Why should I have to turn my phone off to avoid it, when I may be expecting an important call, or an unexpected emergency call comes through?
Overall, I thought the article to be fairly bland, and frankly, rather alarmist.
Re:One thing about privacy... (Score:2, Interesting)
I won't spend a lot of time pounding on the fact that you are posting under an alias, rather than yor real name, though I will mention it. 8-).
My problem is not that I'm afraid for my actions to be publically recorded, but that I might be victimized by the local government. For example, if I kiss my date good night at her door, and there's an ordinance against PDA (Public Display of Affection), then I'm ticketed an fined.
It's not so much the good laws as the bad laws that you want to avoid.
I guess if you want to get technical, I'm for "hiding" from bad laws.
-- Terry
Re:One thing about privacy... (Score:5, Insightful)
That's shortsighted as hell. Maybe nothing you do is "bad" now, but maybe something you do will be illegal tomorrow. There are plenty of things that are perfectly legal that are unpopular as hell. Voting is legal, but the idea of the secret ballot is the only thing that makes it work. Privacy is more vital to our lives than simply not going to jail.
Remember: If we let Bush and Ashcroft tear up our Constitution, then the terrorists have already won.
Ironic... (Score:2)
Re:One thing about privacy... (Score:2, Insightful)
- Martin Niemoeller
"Those who would trade freedom for a little temporary security
deserve neither freedom nor security.".
- Ben Franklin
The question is not why are they watching you now. The question is why they will be watching you in 10, 20, 50 years. The simple fact is, no government avoids tyranny for a very long time, and our founding fathers knew it. With this kind of precedent set, a future, less nice, government basically has free reign over your data.
It's funny, the American revolution was fought over far smaller violations than the current American government commits every single day. I always find questions like "what would Thomas Jefferson do" in regards to current political questions. Thomas Jefferson would overthrow the US government with armed force. Thomas Jefferson was a terrorist / patriot / freedom-fighter.
Re:One thing about privacy... (Score:2)
I live in a small southern city, and I see it happening allready. If you are a black male and you get arrested, you are never, ever, ever, getting off of parole, they'll add a year for tossing a cigarette out of your car.
Thankfully, I'm a white kid with middle-class parents. The police let me get away with a quarter ounce sack of marijuana with only a warning. God bless America.
Terrorist Eating habits? (Score:4, Insightful)
So, what exactly are the eating habits of a terrorist? Do they all eat the same thing? Can I be flagged as a terrorist because I enjoy Mid-East food? Or, perhaps I am one of those "axis of evil" Korean people because I like kimchi and yaki-niku(ok, so that one is Japanese/Korean food)...
Is anyone else at least moderately (understatement) disturbed by the compiling of a profile of "terrorist eating habits"? It seems insanely useless to me. The idea that someone might get "special attention" because of the way he/she eats...pffft. The sad thing is, I won't be at all surprised if/when this happens.
Re:Terrorist Eating habits? (Score:2)
Re:Terrorist Eating habits? (Score:5, Funny)
To allay suspicion, be sure to buy pork or alcohol every time you go to the store.
Re:Terrorist Eating habits? (Score:3, Funny)
So remember all, next time you are at a LAN party, and some sick terrorist bastard orders tuna and sweetcorn, kill the fucker, for [Queen and] Country.
Re:Terrorist Eating habits? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Terrorist Eating habits? (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't be an idiot. As soon as the authorities adopt an exlcusive rule -- "We won't stop grandmothers" -- they open up a huge hole in their procedures, one which will get exploited. How many people ever crashed 767 into skyscrapers after hijacking them with paper cutters? The only way such procedures as searches can be effective is if they are either (a) universal or (b) truly random and very frequent. Any pattern employed can be used against the search. Why do you think Al Queada is trying to recruit "ordinary" Americans??
From where I sit, all this whining about "They even search gradmas, for Pete's sake" seems to come from people who are all for waging war but don't want to pay even the tiny price of extra time in the airports. "Let's you and them fight, but as soon as this 'war' involves sacrifice on my part, we need to reconsider." And generally it's not really the 76-year-old grandma that they want excluded from the search -- it's the safe-seeming white middle class.
Re:Terrorist Eating habits? (Score:2)
(Not that the current security methods work in the first place, but..)
Re:This is insightful? (Score:2)
Why do people seem to believe that law enforcement is "all-logical, all-careful, and all-powerful"? Why do people assume that targeted ethnic searching won't lead to higher incidence of abuse of the innocent?
I don't assume that terrorists are all-logical. I just assume that they are logical: that a search pattern significant enough to stir recognition in the average traveler, and enough to be run on national news, might -- just maybe -- also be obvious enough to be spotted by the terrorists.
It hasn't been shown that this is where it does the most good. The case for racial profiling hasn't ever been made, much less made well. On the other hand, in a world of limited resources, it certainly doesn't make sense to throw away resources you have. If it's true that
then does it makes sense to blindly alienate the community in which that intelligence work must take place? Is it reasonable to ask the average Arab-American to risk their lives for a country that makes them pariahs based -- not on their citizenship, their record, or their contributions -- but on their genetics? How many people will come forward to a law enforcement regime that states, blatantly, "We don't trust you, because of your skin"?
The call for racial profiling is just another quick-fix, "minimize my inconvenience" tactic that goes against the grain of American liberty in the name of pursuing a chimeric safety in this so-called war. It would at best engender a false sense of security and could conceivably unerdmine the safety of the citizens of the US... even the ones blessed enough to be the "good" racial groups.
Re:Terrorist Eating habits? (Score:2)
but has an expectant mother or an little old grandma or teenage girl EVER hijacked a plane or commited an act of terrorism?!
Are you serious?
Do you ever what the news, or doesn't your news cover the middle-east?
Only some weeks ago, a teenage girl blew her self up in Israel. In fact, it was the first time that a bomber was a teenage girl, which is why it made international news.
So much for your ideas of gender profiling.
Ugh. much of this stuff is a no-brainer (Score:4, Interesting)
Big suprise. Guess what that black dome is above it. I'll give you a clue, the sticker that says "Camera" is right... Also, I'd expect the bank to keep the records for at least 10 years (census data/back taxes).
--Mark enters his office building and takes the elevator to 5. (cameras..)
Guess how much theft happens in places like that... They're just defending against that. And if trust between your employer is an issue, you can always get a different job. Just be glad they dont lock the fire doors like they did in the early 1900's.
--Mark writes a friend: "No raise. My boss is a liar."
Unless you're using heavy encryption AND sending to a secure source (someone who wont blab), he's an IDIOT. I'd laugh and then find a different way to fire/lay him off.
--Mark IMs his girlfriend: "Don't worry about last night. I'll get tested. Love you."
Anybody's who heard of DSniff wont be saying stuff like this over ANY network.
--Mark deletes a file containing freelance work he did for a competitor.
We've went over this in every major publication. This should NOT be new material. And figuring the crowd is the SciAM subscribers (me), I'd figure the average computer security like this would be common knowledge.
--Mark calls a friend from the street at his lunch break. "Dude, she wants me to get an AIDS test," he confides.
We know that cell phones are NOT safe. They're broadcast devices. Even during 9-11, some senator said that getting cell records were trivial at best.
--Almost home, Mark stops to buy deodorant and toilet paper; the card saves him 36 cents.
Dead horse. I simply state that I will fill in fake info if you give me one. I then take one, scribble through it, use it, and then toss it on the ground. Stores are pulling this shit, so I do the same.
--Mark shows his driver's license to enter his favorite bar.
I'd demand to talk to the bar manager, demand to know why he thinks he has the right to STEAL my information. If he doesnt let me in, I go elsewhere and LET both bars know that.
A lot of this "information stealing" is the cost of life in this type of society. Much of that data is useless. Simply, use your head. If it seems weird (like idiots who want to pre-approve you for a cred card) TELL EM' NO!
Re:Ugh. much of this stuff is a no-brainer (Score:2)
Um, they have to check your ID, it's the law. If the bar get's caught with drunk minors on the premises, they get shut down. You could let both bars know how you feel about it, but both bars won't let you in.
Re:Ugh. much of this stuff is a no-brainer (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Ugh. much of this stuff is a no-brainer (Score:2)
Which, of course, is the whole point of this article. Just because it's obvious doesn't mean it's not bad.
Idiot.
Article (Score:2)
gaahhh!!
ahem...
Here's How (Score:2)
Get ride of the cell phone, unplug from the internet, hell get ride of the computer, since cash is still not tracked (just yet. .
Don't buy a new car with a gps locator, don't take loans. No debt cards, no bank account. Wear gloves, no finger prints.
This can go on and on depending on how paranoid you are.
The thing is most of us want the convience of the technology and thus we are willing to give up little bits and pieces of information about ourselves here or there. To the grocery store, to the bank, to the piggies, etc. . .
Has "Popular Science" come to this? (Score:3, Insightful)
Just trying to count the number of technical mis-statements in those two sentences alone makes my head hurt.
Popular? Yes.
Science? Barely.
So they know what kind of ice cream I like? And? (Score:2, Interesting)
I want to be able to withhold information to myself, that much is sure. Maybe Ive scribbled an equation to some new form of energy on a piece of paper. No one or government has a right to that except me. But the rest of it, like the GPS enabled phones... Okay, so 20 years from now the "government" can take over some cell phone company and tell where everyone on a cell phone is standing. Then the "government" can build a massive database of EVERYONE's web traffic, and see that 2/3 the country visits porno sites, then the "government" builds a database and see's that you've flown from Floria to New Hampshire 5 times this year! For all 300 million citizens of America. NOW what? So how does that bring about the destruction of our world? Does the "government" (the same one you see made of honest NYC Firemen, and young Marines that were the friends and family you grew up with, the same American's that will remove Bill Maher from TV just because he thought for himself and said "running airplanes into buildings isn't cowardly" (ie, we are overly-politically correct), these same people are going to up and one day decide "okay, everyone who's looked at a porno website and eaten vanilla ice cream in the last 30 days, you're all getting baked in an oven." When does this happen? And what purpose does it serve? I think everyone looks at Nazi Germany and thinks that if we get GPS cellphones that's the next logical step. The world is a different place now. The bright light of the media is "EVERYWHERE" and loves stories and exploitations. If the "government" wants to single out a group of people based on information, say, religious preference, they can just go to all the churches of one kind with a pickup truck and take them away. It isn't going to start or stop with GPS cellphones. Again, I want privacy, I expect privacy "for those things I have made or do on my own in my own private home". Why do we expect privacy when dealing with the outside world? You're on tape going in to K-Mart, every CC purchase you make is logged. If you call customer service at your electric company the call is taped. You have decided you want to deal with the public. You will realize there will be records of it. How much privacy do you think there is in a 25 person african village? How about a small midwestern town? Stop expecting privacy when using services provided by someone other than yourself.
CRAP (Score:3, Troll)
If you want to read something real about the same matter, browse to EFF 'Privacy - Surveillance & Wiretapping' Archive [eff.org].
As long as I can see my own information. (Score:2, Interesting)
As much privacy as we want (Score:2, Interesting)
1) Dont use ATMS
2) work where there isn't tight security
3) dont write personal email or send IMs from work
4) keep your files where they belong
5) go to a doctor that does not share medical information
6) dont use a discount card
7)Dont let them scan your license
8)Dont use an I-pass or a GPS.
9)For god sakes dont use a cell phone.
People selling your information are not people that you cant live without. (the medical community being a notable exception) You dont have to move to Montana or become a recluse to maintain your privacy. We sometimes assume that these things are needed to maintain a life, but they are not. A combination of lifestyle and policy can keep you out of the system.
Medical Data (Score:2, Informative)
"No federal laws protect the privacy of medical records."
This part is just plain wrong. There is indeed a federal law to protect the privacy of medical records, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). It's not in effect yet because there are provisions in the law that give health providers a specific amount of time to bring their organizations into compliance after the publication of the rules. The rules have been published. The clock is ticking and health care providers are spending big $$$ right now to implement their plans for compliance by the deadline. The law implements real fundamental changes in the way personal health information is handled (including required logging of every access to medical records and serious penalties for misappropriation of patient data).
Words I never thought I'd see together... (Score:2)
"/Popular Science/ is running an
Double Edged. (Score:2)
Re:Double Edged. (Score:2)
All you have to do is be a member of a group to get ethnically or otherwise profiled and the FBI will come down. Not on you in particular, but if your name comes up on the wrong list, good bye. Not that I feel strongly about Skakel, but isn't it worrying that Connecticut (and probably elsewhere) law allowed a murder conviction based entirely on circumstantial evidence? I don't know or care if he did it- I disapprove of the law that allowed that conviction. Now you were saying that I shouldn't worry about my privacy?
I'm going to get flamed..... (Score:2)
-My boss reading my email?? At work, it's not my email!
-My boss reading my IMs at work? It's not my network!
-Cameras on the street? It's a public place, they can film if they want!
-If I go to a bar and they keep my name on record, well, it's their bar. I can buy a beer and go home and drink. Now if they sell that information, that's something else...
Don't get me wrong, I'm not agreeing with everything....
-Collecting and selling my medical records? That's shameful and these people should be castrated.
-Forcing my ISP to release information is also shameful. My personal surfing habits are my business.
I just feel that you can't expect to have complete privacy everywhere you go. Your personal life is your own, but anything you do in public is exactly that, public.
Tracking isn't all bad... (Score:3, Flamebait)
"In May of this year, for example, an 18-year-old Miami girl was kidnapped and murdered on a Saturday night. By working with her bank to track transactions on her ATM card, the police were able to follow her abductors as they traveled from one location to another"
If the privacy advocates had their way, this criminal would probably still be out there.
'nuff said.
Re:Tracking isn't all bad... (Score:2)
//rdj
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Tracking isn't all bad... (Score:5, Insightful)
"If you're not doing anything wrong, you shouldn't be concerned with people watching you."
False. You should be concerned with people watching you because they can harm your interests even if you are not doing anything wrong. Just for example, if somebody could see how you voted, they could harass you or bribe you. That's why voting booths have privacy curtains. Privacy is essential to democracy and freedom.
If you buy valuable objects (electronics, jewelry, whatever), you are doing nothing wrong. But if the wrong people get ahold of that information, you become a target for theft. How do you keep information like the addresses of people with valuable items out of the hands of criminals? You keep it out of the hands of companies that collect it. They almost never have your security at heart, and they often have lax security procedures. Privacy is essential for security.
How do you keep your competitor from learning your business plans? You keep the plans secret. You do not want information about what you are buying or whom you are meeting to get into your competitor's hands. How you keep them from learning that information? You keep it out of everybody's hands. Privacy is essential for business.
How do you protect yourself from sexual assault? You don't let strangers know your address. You don't let every peon employee who sees a pretty woman in a store find out where she lives. How do you keep strangers from getting her address? You don't let companies collect it. Privacy is essential for safety.
How do you keep telemarketers from bothering you? You don't let them have your phone number or information about your interests and purchasing patterns. (They may still call randomly, but this decreases targeted calls.) How do you keep them from getting that information? You don't let companies collect it. Privacy is essential for peace and quiet.
There are several things you can do. (Score:5, Insightful)
2. Buy a prepay mobile phone, pay cash for the top-up cards.
3. Set up free email addresses with Yahoo and the like. Use one address to get others.
4. Don't use encryption. Or alternatively, get *everyone* else to use encryption, but don't raise a flag over your mails.
5. Don't bother with store loyalty cards. I mean, are you really bothered about 5p off a product?
6. Support/use your local family grocer or market rather than the big chain stores.
There's more you can do, but doing the above is simple and will reduce your information profile significantly.
Re:There are several things you can do. (Score:5, Interesting)
I think it's a mistake to approach the problem in terms of minimizing the footprint you leave. Why set yourself up in opposition to the system when you can utilize it's own methods to protect yourself?
For instance, why not use a grocery card with purchases that you would *want* people to see, like that you buy lots of broccoli and juice? In the worst case scenario, if an insurance company ever saw those records they'd believe you had lower cancer risk. Pay in cash for things you want them *not* to see, such as the bag of chocolates, smokes and double bottle of cheap red wine.
Put books on gardening and cooking on your credit card bill, pay in cash for books on hacking.
Use an ordinary mobile phone except for when you truly *need* privacy, and for god's sake turn it off when you cross state lines to buy grass!
Set up email accounts in several different classes: One that you *want* identified with you for legitimate personal/professional contact; one for questionable personal use (e.g., dirty jokes) that you access through a proxy server; one as a throwaway that you don't really care about, say for registration sites. And don't mix them up!
The point is to understand the system well enough to *purposely shape* the profile that's built of you rather than eliminating it all together. The latter option is becoming increasingly unrealistic.
Re:There are several things you can do. (Score:4, Interesting)
2) Never signed up for a prepay cell phone, this may be a good strategy, again, paying in cash may not buy you much though.
3) Also a fine point for the paranoid, but I'm not sure all these huge companies are all trading personal information so that any email address can be tracked down to someone.
4) Now this is just damn stupid. This is like telling someone to send all important information on a post card instead of in an envelope. Sure, an encrypted email may raise a flag somewhere, but if you use good encryption and use it for as much of your email as possible, pretty much no one short of the NSA is going to decipher your mail and after the NSA wastes enough time deciphering "Hello, how have you been?" messages, they may decide they are not worth the trouble. And if you believe they will try to read each and every encrypted email even if history shows all to be benign in your case, they would probably be reading your plaintext mail, especially if it happened to contain a few keywords.
5) Alternatively I would say feed the personal information out with bogus data, better yet get your friends to do the same and swap cards ever so often. That way you save money and provide no personal information.
6) If a local grocer or market exists, then yes, this is a nice thing to do, for more reasons than just protecting personal information. In fact, if your sole goal is protection of private informaiton this is not a good strategy. The better strategy would be to cycle your shopping among different stores and have those stores be far away, just because you aren't being electronically tracked does not mean other people can't look and see what you buy. If you are going to be paranoid, might as well be extremely paranoid.
I'm not that protective of my information, I really don't have anything to hide from the NSA. Encrypted email may set off flags, but I don't give a damn, I don't trust post cards and so I don't trust email, and if the NSA knows I'm telling my friend he can come over this weekend, I don't care.
I like protecting what I can from common eyes, but do not obssess over whether executives at Food Lion know I bought beef last week, or even that my bank knows I bought something expensive from an electronics store a while back. Protecting privacy is all good, but there is a point where the inconveniences are just overboard to protect data that no one is really interested in anyway, or at least data that can't really be used against you.
Privacy is overrated (Score:2)
People just don't behave themselves unless they know they are being watched and either criticized or given approval. This applies to drivers, policemen, government employees, hackers, anyone, as far as I can see.
One of the nice things about IT is its ability to blast huge holes in walls of 'privacy'. Don't forget that every nasty corporation hoping to turn a quick buck by selling private data can eventually be subject to the same inspection as Joe Schmo driving to work.
Re:Privacy is overrated (Score:2)
You mean that we can sell their private data?
People go to prison for that sort of thing.
I also take issue with your assertion that I misbehave when left to my own devices.
The only thing that a loss of privacy will bring is more targetted advertising, and more targetted attacks on members of minority groups by the majority.
There was a case here in the UK a couple of years ago involving a little girl that was killed by a paedophile. Some groups of parents around the country started protesting against known and suspected paedophiles in their community, occasionally going as far as hounding them out and forcing them to move.
All fine, right? After all, paedophiles are evil, right?
Only trouble is that one of the people forced out was a paediatrician. The mob just saw the "paed" prefix and went baying for blood. She'd still be living in the same house now and would've been spared the experience if she'd only had a little more privacy.
As for the mob, they were interviewed on TV regularly over the course of a week or so. Lack of privacy didn't stop them, it encouraged them - they wanted people to sit up and take notice, to get a law passed forcing police to inform people of paedophiles that moved into the area.
My personal feeling is that a lack of privacy will do little to improve society, and has the potential to expose even more people to victimisation and pressure to conform. But then, I was teased at school and am "different" now, so I guess my outloook isn't as rosy as it could be.
Cheers,
Tim
And to think they laughed (Score:2)
Lessons Learned (Score:5, Funny)
Lessons Learned:
For thieves and low-lifes only:
Does anyone know where I can download that "Caught In The Act" video?
People are stupid and crazy (Score:2)
Meanwhile, Larry Ponemon, the CEO of Privacy Council, says that since September 11 he's been hired by at least one major supermarket chain to oversee the handing over to law enforcement agencies of the buying records of customers with specific ethnic backgrounds. The authorities requested the data, Ponemon says, because they were trying to compile a profile of "terrorist eating habits."
There is nothing that can be added to that.
The crux: is it OK if it's "just" commercial? (Score:2)
It is this: there are many people who believe that invasion of privacy is perfectly OK as long as it is done only in pursuit of commerce.
In other words, if they have a dossier on you and they use it to blacklist you and prevent you from getting work, that's wrong; but as long as all they do with it is use it to sell you things, that's OK.
I happen to believe myself that it is definitely not OK. But I think it would clarify the debate if it clear that, currently, that's at the core of what the debate is about.
By the way, don't you wonder whether companies really use all that marketing information in the positive ways they suggest ("If you just bought a recumbent bike, wouldn't you actually LIKE to get catalogs of gear for recumbent bikes?") or whether it's really being used for electronic redlining?
How to disappear completely (Score:2, Funny)
depends on the regime (Score:2)
In other countries, maybe in between your ears.
The world has become too dangerous to let anyone have privacy.
And it will remain so until we ACT on declarations of war, Jihad and Fatwah and paint a bull's eye on the declarator's forehead and blow it off.
There will be no peace for the US and no return to the less expensive and freer way of life until we have a government hit squad who are mandated openly and supported with funds who'se mission is to terminate with extreme prejudice any individual who overtly declares war, Jihad and Fatwah on us.
Its that simple.
Now it would be CHEAPER to do it that way but Americans will just suck up the cost and kiss their privacy good bye because they're idiots and the terrorists will still be able to organize covertly and then come here and blow up busses and mail boxes.
This loss of privacy will NOT address the covert operations but a publicly supported "Hit Squad" might eliminate the public justification and posturing and fund-rasing efforts. (Box cutters and twenty plane tickets may have been cheap but testing out the strategy and feeding, clothing and housing the animals who destroyed the WTC cost. Without Osama's millions, it wouldn't have happened.)
But until Islam recovers some sense of shame about hom-/suic-icide, your best bet is making wide spread use of electric energy and a nice, brightly painted, thermo-nuclear device on a tall pole planted in Mecca displaying a simple message: "Attack us and we set this off!"
How much? (Score:2)
There is not right of privacy (Score:4, Insightful)
Throughout most of human existance privacy was a virtual unknown. Communities were small enough that everyone knew everyone else. Everyone knew where you were, where you were going, and what you were going to do when you got there. The only privacy you had was within your own home if you were lucky enough to have one. Back then (prior to a mere few decades ago) privacy meant solitude
Jump to today. We are so confused over privacy it's almost funny. We would be incensed if everyone knew that we were buying condoms online, yet we buy them at the local drug store in plain sight. We display outrage when a website tracks our addresses, yet we post our real estate listings in the local paper. We wonder why PGP hasn't caught on for email with the general public, yet we yack on the cell phone in the clear all day long.
The big disconnect is easy to explain. We think we have an expectation of privacy because we are sitting in a chair in our homes with the curtains closed. But in reality we are online spewing out personal information as fast as we can over the internet. Here's an experiment. Go buy the very same product three times. The first time buy it online using your personal computer from your home. The second time buy it online using a computer sitting in a public library. The third time buy it from a brick and mortar retailer.
We should have, and must have, privacy within our own homes, including the harddrives of the computers within our homes. But that privacy ends at the walls of our homes. Once we engage in communication beyond our house walls, it's up to us to make our own privacy by using encryption, anonymizers or whatnot.
Re:gps... so? (Score:3, Funny)
Well, maybe for those of us who never leave the house.
Re:Cash is King! (Score:3, Insightful)
Ever run a cash drawer? Unless you scan every bill that comes in and goes out, you'd have better luck tracking VD in a dance club.
Say I wander into a Cold Stone Creamery for a bowl of French Vanilla with blueberries. I pay with a 10. and get back a five and pitch the one in the tip jar because the girl behind the counter is cute. The guy in line behind me pays with a 20, and gets my 10 as part of his change.
Unless whatever bill I hand across the counter is scanned as I do it, and likewise, my change scanned as it comes back, how will [insert big brother of choice here] know I spent that 10 bucks on ice cream, and not next door at Fascinations, on a pack of condoms and some strawberry flavored lube?
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Cash is King! (Score:2)
but what happens when there must be a record of all transactions of money? the USA Patriot Act II, or whatever it eventually is called.
John is carrying a $20 #BB774532A. Everyone knows he is carrying it, because he received it from an ATM this morning and it has not shows up on any transaction records. The next day, Larry, known dealer in Mary Jane, uses the $20 #BB774532A to buy a 12-pack of Corona at the corner Quick Stop. Moments later, a warrant is automatically printed out and faxed to the precinct closest to where John works. He is picked up on suspicion of Marijuana posession, searched, and lo and behold, there's the little Zip-Loc baggie of grass.
It will happen.
-rp
Re:Must be Yanks (Score:5, Insightful)
I know I personally wouldn't want some of the strip joints I go to, to become common knowledge. While I may enjoy the naked women, I wouldn't want a potential employer (or even my current employer) to know what I'm gonna be doing with that money they'd be(en) paying me.
Too much information can color an impression of an otherwise honorable person. You may say something like, "I have nothing to hide, so this doesn't bother me." Don't fall into that trap. Something will come up that you would rather not be public knowledge. Maybe you wet the bed till you were in high school. Do you want your boss to confront you about that herpes test you had last week? Do your co-workers know how you REALLY feel about Star Trek/Star Wars/Buffy/Simpsons? What would they say about ALL that memorabelia that you have? What were you DOING down in the seedier parts of town last night? Buying drugs? No...just seeing those stippers...again. Does your Mom know about your subcription to Playboy/Penthouse/Hustler/Big'uns? All those things and more will become easier and easier to discover, just because you say you have nothing to hide.
Re:Must be Yanks (Score:2)
Nope
"Do you want your boss to confront you about that herpes test you had last week?"
Never had one
"Do your co-workers know how you REALLY feel about Star Trek/Star Wars/Buffy/Simpsons?"
Yes, and what has that to do with my job anyway?
"What would they say about ALL that memorabelia that you have?"
Don't have any
"What were you DOING down in the seedier parts of town last night?"
Never been there. Don't drink, don't smoke, don't do drugs. Happily married for the last 21 years. getting all the pleasure I need from my wife.
"Buying drugs? No...just seeing those stippers...again."
Nope, see above.
"Does your Mom know about your subcription to Playboy/Penthouse/Hustler/Big'uns?"
don't have one. See above the above.
Some people really are upstanding honest citizens wwho lead perfectly normal (some may say boring) lives, and are perfectly happy doing so.
Re:Must be Yanks (Score:2)
Now, this is just an example. Perhaps sometimes you drive too fast, or keep a library book overdue, or inadvertently do something that violates some little-known, little-advertised regulation in some sub-paragraph of a dusty law book. All you need to do is anger one guy (a friend of a friend of an asshole cop) to get someone on your back. And if they're allowed to look into your every move without just cause, and they have records that show everything you've done over the years, then that one thing you did...well, it could get you a year in jail, or at least a public humiliation and reputation as someone who's "had trouble with the law."
Personally, I think the solution is to have no secrets. I think the reason people get wiered out about privacy is that there is an imbalance in it. To wit: the government can know all kinds of secrets about you, but you have little to no ability to know the government's secrets. If the law was that there are no secrets...that no person, no matter who they are or what their position, is entitled to even one secret...the playing field would be level...and what would it matter that you know what goes on in my bedroom because I know what goes on in yours...it would become such trivia as to be boring and so would be mostly ignored...but if I were commiting crimes, anyone could know about it...and if George W. Bush were evil [mediastudy.com] or maybe trying to hide something [artvoice.com] well...he couldn't, and we'd all know every last detail about the skeletons in his closet. [realchange.org]
Re:Must be Yanks (Score:2)
Yes I am human, I lead what might be considered by many to be a trivial and boring life. Of course I have made mistakes, and violated minor laws, such as speeding, but have paid the penalty when I got caught( a small fine) and that didn't bother me in the slightest. I don't think I've ever done anything that would cause me "public humiliation" and at least here in the UK, I would hope (perhaps wrongly) that our CPS (Criminal Prosecution Service) would toss out on the spot any case brought against me because I angered a friend of a friend of a bad cop. They're far too busy dealing with real criminals.
There is a place for secrecy (bank acount numbers and stuff like that) but it irritates me when people go on about having movements tracked by gps phones/atm withdrawels/loyalty cards/public cameras and how it is such a violation of privacy that someone knows this stuff. I don't give a toss that someone knows I took 20 quid out of an ATM this morning, or that at 08:00 I left my house to go catch the train. If people are that curious about my life, then all I can say is that they lead even sadder lives than I do!!!
The fact that surveilance such as that mentioned above can help catch real crims is more important to me than not having surveilance because people feel it violates their privacy. I'm not even really that bothered about people reading my emails, there's nothing important or exciting in them!
Re:Must be Yanks (Score:2, Interesting)
So your idea is to get rid of privacy altogether? I certainly wouldnt want to live in such a country where no one has any secrets or privacy. That would be one huge step toward a 1984ish world.
How would you enforce such a law? Would you watch the populace constantly? Would you deploy a ThoughtPolice? Or would you simply rely on everyone to make their secrets public?
Asking everyone to make their secrets public wouldnt change anything. The people who really have something to hide obviously wouldnt comply - and those who do comply would only have that used against them.
Watching the populaces every move (even in their own homes), would be a huge invasion of privacy. Furthermore, it would not uncover everyones secrets. This would be a huge disappointment in the name of freedom - it would be Big Brother run amuck. The same goes if you were to deploy the ThoughtPolice.
There is no way to enforce such a wild idea, and it could only result in further abuse of power by the goverment.
Re:Must be Yanks (Score:2)
Happy? Good!
Re:I think it's funny! (Score:3, Insightful)
The fact is that Slashdot editors have appointed themselves representatives of the Slashdot community, and all those continuing to participate in adding content to the Slashdot website are clearly endorsing that arrangement. Neither cmdrtaco or anyone else is obligated to listen to you or give you a platform to spout your bullshit mean-spirited humor. It is not an act of censorship or a violation of your privacy to use your ip address to kick you out of where you are not wanted. By continuing to hang around, a stronger argument can be made that you are infringing on their right (and clearly demonstrated desire and intent) to be rid of you (or your unwanted additions to the content anyway).
This is not a democracy. You do not have an implicit or god-given right to spout off here. It's a carefully manipulated and engineered community. If you don't care to participate in that community, if it's standards and practices offend you, exercise your right to go elsewhere.
This is Slashdot and banning, moderation, meta-moderation, and editors are part of what makes the site what it is. Yes all those features can lead to situations clearly "unfair": even against the intent of those in charge. Yes like all systems this system is flawed. If you've found something better, go there. If you have ideas about how to make the system better, submit them in a constructive way or implement them yourself.
In the meantime, as far as I'm concerned you should fuck off. I'm sure Alan Cox (and his wife for that matter) is a smarter and better person than you, and more importantly Alan Cox plays a significant role in Slashdot culture. Your comments were hurtful and not constructive or beneficial in any way. You aren't a reformer or a rebel. You are a troll: so who cares about you and your petty complaints?
Re:I think it's funny! (Score:2, Insightful)
You may have a right to free speech. But that right was given with the assumption there are no consequences, that you have a degree of anonymity which is no longer there. If you now spout opinions, you must now expect consequences, and those consequences are inescapable. In the past, you would have moved to a different town where noone knew you, you can wipe the slate clean and start again. You no longer have the option.
If you feel Slashdot is too draconian then yes, you can always start your own webpage. But if you feel America is becoming too draconian, how do you start your own country?
Yes, it is a democracy, but the PC brigade hold sway. Would you hire somebody to look after your kids if you knew they were an active poster on alt.abuse.children.doit.doit.doitnow? I know I wouldn't. If they complained, noone would argue in favour of them, because they would be blamed if they actually do abuse (whereas the abuser would be excused, as they were clearly sick and doing only what came natural to them, when you look at all this 'evidence' in hindsight).
Would you expect the government to put someone in charge of the transport of nuclear material if they were part of a terrorist organisation? Of course not, there would be hell to pay IF THEY DO ANYTHING. But do you think they would wait for absolute proof first? Of course not, it's not as if it is a trial! As a student, involvement in any socialist group would exclude you from certain government jobs in the past. Today, if you shared a flat with someone who is a member of a terrorist organisation, they would probably consider that a sufficient risk. With more information they can apply stricter safeguards, excluding people who may have possibly been infected with terrorist propaganda - so don't buy ice cream from a vendor who is a member of a terrorist organisation, just in case. You mean he didn't tell you? Of course, if he does, that may be propaganda infection - Erase yourself immediately.
With no restrictions on use of this data, you can find yourself marked as a second class citizen despite having done nothing wrong.
And I'm only thinking about abuse of genuine information. I don't want to consider the situations where the data is modified - e.g. the lazy cop who wants to track someone he really believes is smuggling liquor but can't get any evidence, may decide to mark him up as a suspected terrorist, so the FBI can do the tracking instead. He gets his conviction, and the man is marked for life!
Re:I-Pass (EZ-Pass) question (Score:2)
It's worth the buck. Unless you're getting on the Mass Pike from I 84, in which case they should pay you a toll for putting up with their bad road design.
Re:No need to get upset (Score:2)
I know that I'm not. I even work for a part of the government. Some of my attitudes can be misinterpreted, however. It's easy to get caught in a net that has nothing to do with you, especially in the last year. The public doesn't even know who has been arrested. Maybe everyone that's being held secretly since 9-11 is a mean terrorist. Maybe most of them are just poor immigrants. Maybe some of them are US citizens who just eat more couscous than the rest of us do. None of us know who they are, though. None of us know what perfectly legal and normal things are going to look wierd in what database and land you in a jail without a lawyer or a phone call. Therefore, we all need to worry about privacy.